Ultimately this finale does a good enough job of wrapping up the Divergent Universe arc, but it doesn’t do a fantastic job of it, you get me?
It’s fine. I was entertained, but a lot of it felt like scenes and situations were being written to justify a lengthy finalize as opposed to what length it could have/should have been.
I want to open this review by advising anyone sensitive to racial stereotyping that there’s a rather unfortunate ‘tribal island people have a ritualistic human hunt’ plot line that becomes very important midway though the story. The Most Dangerous Game is name dropped, and the idea that a person is being hunted down is clearly in reference to it.
That said, The Most Dangerous Game works because it’s not an accepted social norm, it’s a rich guy hunting people for sport because he has nothing better to do. Referencing a story like that and making a tribe of islanders the instigators misses the point.
Back to the review:
The idea of the cyclical universe was really good. The conceptual non-existence of time due to the never ending cycle of the universe makes a lot of sense in a ‘this is another universe’ kind of way and I really dug it as a central theme. However, I think that payoff would have been more effective if every story in the Divergent Universe was cyclical. Enough of them were to drive the point home, but if you’re going to make this a big deal for this universe, why would it not be… universally applicable?
I particularly liked Rassilon’s parts because to be honest, I’ve always liked him as a villain. He’s just a pathetic old man who rests on his manufactured laurels of godhood and it’s always compelled me. His ending especially was just perfect.
Perfection as a character fell flat to me. Sometimes it’s very, very obvious that these scripts were written by men and she’s a great example of that. Charley also suffers for this, as her most cliche Woman In LoveTM traits were on display in every conversation with Perfection. I didn’t find it very interesting at all. Quite honestly, no female character particularly stood out as good here, L’da was still cliche Dead Wife despite an extended dialogue in the first third of this story.
All that said, C’rizz had some cool stuff going on here, especially in the middle of the episode. It’s been really nice the last few episodes to actually get into this guy’s head and see what he’s about.
This story is fine. It was engaging enough that I didn’t want to turn it off but certainly nothing really gripped me.